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Politics

Trump Celebrates US 250th Birthday With UFC Event

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Mauricio Ruffy waits in the White House before his fight with Michael Chandler (not pictured) in a lightweight bout of UFC Freedom 250 fights taking place on the South Lawn of the White House on Sunday.

For the second year in a row, President Donald Trump commemorated his birthday with a bizarre spectacle in Washington DC.

After an inclement weather delay, Trump’s UFC extravaganza – which also marked America’s 250th birthday – kicked off on Sunday evening with a bout between two featherweight fighters who made their entrances from the White House.

The opening underscored the strangeness of the gathering, which marked the rare use of the White House for a professional sports competition and for a function hosted by a private company.

Trump has faced criticism for promoting such events at the White House and for backing an exhibition that’s expected to benefit numerous commercial interests, including the UFC and Paramount.

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Mauricio Ruffy waits in the White House before his fight with Michael Chandler (not pictured) in a lightweight bout of UFC Freedom 250 fights taking place on the South Lawn of the White House on Sunday.
Mauricio Ruffy waits in the White House before his fight with Michael Chandler (not pictured) in a lightweight bout of UFC Freedom 250 fights taking place on the South Lawn of the White House on Sunday.

Additionally, the fight has drawn scrutiny, given the emphasis Trump placed on it while grappling with other major issues, including a struggling economy and the effort to finalise a deal to end the US war on Iran.

Just hours before the main card of “UFC Freedom 250” was set to begin, Trump said that an agreement with Iran was “now complete,” though it isn’t expected to be formally signed until Friday.

According to a Reuters report, France also pushed back the G7 summit to allow Trump to attend the cage fight on the White House lawn.

Last year, Trump held a military parade for his birthday, which featured tanks and rocket launchers rolling down the streets of the capital.

Fans attend the UFC Freedom 250 Fan Fest on The Ellipse ahead of the UFC Freedom 250 fight on the South Lawn of the White House on Sunday.
Fans attend the UFC Freedom 250 Fan Fest on The Ellipse ahead of the UFC Freedom 250 fight on the South Lawn of the White House on Sunday.

Tasos Katopodis via Getty Images

Sunday’s fight also included large displays, including the construction of a massive 92-foot, 600-ton fighting ring called “The Claw” that towered over the White House on the South Lawn.

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That venue, which was covered in flashing red, white and blue lights, sat roughly 4,000 guests on Sunday evening. Service members wearing colonial attire could also be seen lining the entrance from the White House to the “Octagon,” the trademark eight-sided cage that UFC fighters use.

“The South Lawn has served as one of the most important and ceremonial spaces in American history,” a UFC commentator said as part of a streaming broadcast on Paramount+. “Now, the Octagon is part of that history.”

The UFC "Claw" took over the White House's South Lawn.
The UFC “Claw” took over the White House’s South Lawn.

Win McNamee via Getty Images

All told, there were seven mixed martial arts match-ups, including a face-off between Ilia Topuria and Justin Gaethje for the lightweight title.

Much of the audience was comprised of military service members and Trump allies, including Paramount Skydance CEO David Ellison, comedian Tony Hinchcliffe and Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who has frequented past UFC matches. Trump was also seen watching the fight alongside members of his family, Vice President JD Vance and UFC President Dana White, a longtime supporter.

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The UFC exhibition has been nearly a year in the making and underscores Trump’s deep ties with the mixed martial arts company and its leadership.

Trump first floated the idea in July 2025 during a kickoff for activities commemorating America’s 250th birthday. He’s also been friends with White, who has repeatedly backed his presidential runs and welcomed him ringside at past matches, for years. According to PBS, White also played a role in influencing podcaster Joe Rogan, who was once a UFC color commentator, to throw his backing behind Trump.

More recently, Trump’s brokerage account purchased shares in TKO Holdings, UFC’s parent company, raising questions about whether he could personally see gains from holding the fight on the White House lawn. The Trump organization has said the president had no control over the transaction, and the White House has also denied any conflict of interest.

Branding for various companies was omnipresent at the fight on Sunday, with logos adorning the venue itself and one bout sponsored by Trump’s social media platform, Truth Social.

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The staging of the cage match at the White House was also previously met with widespread opposition.

"The Claw" venue has been constructed specially for the UFC event.
“The Claw” venue has been constructed specially for the UFC event.

Kevin Dietsch via Getty Images

It recently drew a court challenge from the Public Integrity Project, which described the fight as “corrupt” and argued that the administration needed congressional approval for construction related to the UFC event. Last week, a judge ultimately ruled that the fight could proceed.

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The House | “Capturing the essence of a deeply proud and dedicated industry”: Terry Jermy reviews Minette Batters’ ‘Harvest’

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'Capturing the essence of a deeply proud and dedicated industry': Terry Jermy reviews Minette Batters' 'Harvest'
'Capturing the essence of a deeply proud and dedicated industry': Terry Jermy reviews Minette Batters' 'Harvest'

2023: Minette Batters attends a No 10 summit | Image: © Tayfun Salci/ZUMA Press Wire / Alamy


3 min read

Baroness Batters’ enjoyable memoir is an insightful account of her time as head of the NFU and the challenges facing British farmers

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This is the story of the emotional journey of a tenant farmer’s daughter who goes from frowned-upon female farm worker to the glass-ceiling-breaking first female president of the nation’s biggest farming organisation.

Offering a behind-the-scenes glimpse into the life of one of the UK’s most prominent farming advocates, Harvest reveals the everyday life struggles that intertwined with consequential moments in our nation’s history. It provides a fly-on-the-wall account of the conversations that shaped our food and farming industry for a generation.

A passionate firsthand account of her battles with self-confidence and gender stereotyping, Minette Batters provides a window into the soul of an industry that is often difficult to understand from the outside.

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As the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) first female president, Batters broke down barriers, lifting up other women in the agricultural industry in the process. 

I particularly enjoyed learning about how she somewhat accidentally began her career with the NFU. She attended by chance a local NFU meeting and then with great trepidation progressed through various officer ranks until she ended up as its president.

This unplanned ascent came alongside one of the most consequential periods for British farming. Some may say it was fate: she was ideally qualified to head the organisation post-Brexit – when the farming community needed that strong and authentic leadership the most. 

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It provides a fly on the wall account of the conversations that shaped our food and farming industry for a generation

Harvest details how decades-long structural challenges collided with the unexpected withdrawal from the European Union and the removal of the Common Agricultural Policy safety net that masked many of the challenges facing British farming.

At the centre of this national debate on the future of farming sat Batters, navigating through the post-Brexit political turmoil, her deep commitment to farming and her practical approach enabling her to help chart a way forward for the industry.

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It was not lost on me reading Harvest how there were similarities between Batter’s journey and my own. Having started as a local community activist and becoming a town councillor purely to serve the area where I was born and raised, I went on to stand in a general election and defeat a former British prime minister. It was therefore particularly amusing to read about the various interactions between Batters and my South West Norfolk constituency predecessor, Liz Truss.

Harvest book coverBatters shares how her upbringing and difficult relationship with her father shaped her values and commitment to rural life and the farming industry that she came to protect. Capturing the essence of a deeply proud and dedicated industry, Harvest is punctuated by fascinating profiles of the people that feed our nation every single day – revealing a constantly evolving industry, embracing innovation in the face of a changing world.

Scrap the expensive training courses – reading this book should be mandatory for every civil servant in Defra and any politician tasked with making decisions on behalf of the farming industry. For everyone else, this memoir will make you appreciate where our food comes from and the people that produce the harvest that sustains us.

Terry Jermy is Labour MP for South West Norfolk and chair of the Farming APPG

Harvest: A farmer’s story of heritage, home and hope

By: Minette Batters

Publisher: Ebury Press

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7 Steps To Save Basil From Overwatering And Root Rot

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The supermarket basil at the start: growing, but with too much water, in the middle: later growth with fewer overwatering complications on the righr

This year, I decided it was time to start growing my own herbs. I’ve already written about my success with mint, which basically grows no matter what – but I’ve kept pretty quiet about my basil project.

That’s because I keep making mistakes. I don’t pinch the plant enough, so it’s grown tall and stringy instead of lush and bushy. While I divided and separated the roots of my supermarket plant, I still don’t think my pots are big enough for the job.

All of this, however, a basil plant can survive. My main issue was the one that can cause it to “rot” and sometimes die: I overwatered it, leading it to wilt and yellow in patches.

Thankfully, I’ve managed to save the affected plants since (though as you can see from the pictures below, I’m still doing a terrible job of pinching off leaves for bushy growth: I find it hard to let go of my growth!).

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The supermarket basil at the start: growing, but with too much water, in the middle: later growth with fewer overwatering complications on the righr
The supermarket basil at the start: growing, but with too much water, in the middle: later growth with fewer overwatering complications on the righr

What happens if you overwater basil?

Per the RHS, overwatering seedlings can lead to fungal diseases, like fatal damping off.

For adult plants, Homes & Gardens added, too much water can lead to a condition called root rot.

This (as the name suggests) leads the roots to brown, become mushy, and partly decay.

As root rot gets worse, it endangers the plant because it stops it from being able to absorb the nutrients and water it needs to grow and stay alive.

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What causes overwatering for basil?

Basil likes free-draining soil, which is why it needs drainage holes if stored in a plant pot. Letting it sit in moist soil spells disaster.

At first, I thought that meant I needed to apply smaller doses of water. I was only pouring a little into the saucer under my basil plants (always water them from below: watering basil plants’ leaves can cause fungal growth, too), but I was adding it every day.

Speaking to The Spruce, Jordan Mara, founder of Mind & Soil, explained that that’s about the worst watering mistake I could have made.

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You’re far better off giving it deep and infrequent waterings rather than lighter applications of water more regularly, he said.

This not only keeps it hydrated for longer, but “trains the roots of the plant to search down more deeply for water, creating a larger root system,” too.

How often should I water basil?

A deep watering from the base about once a week should do if you’ve got an established plant, Mara said, though factors like the weather and whether your plant is potted or planted could affect that.

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Martha Stewart’s site echoed the advice, suggesting about 2.5-5cm of water once a week unless the weather’s really hot.

Meanwhile, Southern Living recommends a more customised approach.

Plunge your finger into the soil, they advise, and only water if the first 5cm is dry.

What are the signs of overwatered basil?

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  • A bad smell coming from your soil,
  • Yellow leaves, especially at the base or top of the plant,
  • Wilting stems,
  • Brown spots on leaves,
  • Droopy, dull leaves,
  • Mushy, weak, and/or discoloured roots.

What should I do if I’ve overwatered my basil plant?

I saved most of mine with six steps (and saved my sanity with a seventh):

1) Identify issues quickly

Kim Roman, instructor for Square Foot Gardening, told Martha Stewart: “At the first sign of yellowing leaves, you must immediately inspect for the disease as the spores are fast-moving”.

This, it turned out, was true. The basil plant I figured would work it out in the end has since gone to the great well-drained garden in the sky. Check your plants for signs of overwatering at least once every couple of days.

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2) Stop watering immediately

It might sound obvious, but putting more water in your soil at this stage definitely won’t help, Food Gardening Network said.

3) Remove affected areas and clean the rest of the root system

I had some mild root rot, which I confirmed by lifting the soil out of the pot and looking at the roots. If that’s happened to you, shake off any excess soil, run the roots under lukewarm water, and cut off any affected areas (these will be weaker and discoloured).

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4) Let the roots dry overnight and disinfect your plant pot

This can help to get rid of any remaining spores which could come back to haunt your basil.

5) Repot your basil in new, fresh soil

If your old pot doesn’t have drainage holes and/or your previous soil was heavy with clay, change them for more free-draining options (terracotta pots with good drainage and a saucer are generally better for basil). Don’t compact your soil, either, as that can cause it to hold onto more water.

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6) Trim the leaves

If a lot of your roots have gone, much of your plant’s energy and water channels have been cut off too. You may want to remove some of your plant’s leaves after this process, especially if it’s a big plant.

7) Know when to accept defeat

Sadly, BBC Gardener’s World said, it can be tough to treat root rot in established plants. This is especially true if it’s already affected a lot fo your plant’s roots and leaves, as happened with one of my four plants.

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Still, now you get the chance to start all over again. And depending on how long you’ve been growing your basil, odds are you’ve already got a decent return on investment for that sub-£2 supermarket plant.

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The House Opinion Article | The Professor Will See You Now: Tribal politics

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The Professor Will See You Now: Tribal politics
The Professor Will See You Now: Tribal politics

Illustration by Tracy Worrall


4 min read

Lessons in political science. This week: tribal politics

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Ten years, huh? Turns out time really does fly when you’re having fun. There is no more fun way to mark – celebrate? commiserate? (delete as applicable) – the 10th anniversary of the Brexit referendum than by reading Sara Hobolt and James Tilley’s excellent new book, Tribal Politics: How Brexit Divided Britain. It’s a model of social science, packed with data, yet clearly written, and enlivened by a string of digs at the wackier side of the last decade: terrible Brexit novels, conspiracy theories about pencils at polling stations, that Cambridge economist who turned up for a departmental meeting naked – with “Brexit Leaves Britain Naked” written across her breasts – and much more.

The book charts how the process of Brexit – both the referendum and the years of joy that followed – created two distinct political tribes in Britain. These tribes did not exist in any meaningful form prior to 2016, yet the referendum forced people to pick a side, even people who might previously have been relatively lukewarm one way or the other, and then what we might euphemistically call the lack of plain sailing thereafter helped reinforce those identities, creating ingroups (us: clever, honest, open-minded) and outgroups (them: selfish, hypocritical, closed-minded).

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For most of the period since the referendum, more people saw themselves as remainers or leavers than supporters of all the political parties combined. And while the extent of this identity has dipped a little recently, its intensity has not. To quote the example the authors give: while most Lib Dem supporters say their identity is “not very important” to them (you can insert your own joke here), those who see themselves as remainers and leavers say that identity is “very important”. Even 10 years on, majorities of remainers and leavers still say “we” when talking about their side.

We often think that Americans are politically divided, but discrimination by one Brexit tribe against the other is as, or more, widespread than partisan discrimination by Democrats and Republicans. Almost all of this is pretty symmetrical, by the way. Although there are some differences – remainers being slightly worse than leavers – these are outweighed by the similarities. For the most part, your lot are just as bad as their lot.

From a 200-plus-page data-heavy book, containing 30 tables and over 40 graphs, it’s difficult to pull out individual highlights, but if I have a favourite graph – and I am the sort of person to have a favourite graph – then it is Figure 7.5, which tracks people’s attitudes on the state of the economy. The beauty with this one is that it reports the attitudes held by the same people both before and after the referendum. From it, we know that back in 2014, 2015 and 2016 those individuals who went on to become leavers and remainers felt almost identically about how well the economy was doing. Yet as soon as the referendum result was announced, a gap opened up, largely as a result of remainers suddenly thinking everything was going to pot, and that gap has persisted since. The same thing is even true when people were talking about their own finances; after the referendum, remainers suddenly felt personally poorer, while leavers felt richer, even though at that point nothing very much had changed either way. Partisanship is, as the saying goes, a hell of a drug.

A new paper in Political Behavior finds a similar pattern in the US with Tesla. Pre-2024, there was relatively little difference between the way Democrats and Republicans saw the car. Yet after Elon Musk threw in his lot with Donald Trump in 2024, and then led Doge, views began to diverge across different criteria: likelihood to buy, perceptions of quality, reputation, whether there was a buzz about it, and so on. The cars didn’t change, but how Americans saw them did, in ways that were overwhelmingly driven by their party loyalties. 

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Further reading: S Hobolt and J Tilley, Tribal Politics: How Brexit Divided Britain (2026); K Endres et al, Tesla Takedown: Brand Politicization and Partisan Consumerism in the Trump Era, Political Behavior (2026)

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Mean Girls’ Amanda Seyfried And Lindsay Lohan Have Stayed Friends

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Lindsay Lohan and Amanda Seyfried with co-stars Rachel McAdams and co-star Lacey Chabert in 2004's Mean Girls

Long before we knew her for the likes of Mamma Mia!, Mank and The Dropout, Amanda Seyfried found international fame playing Karen in the 2004 teen comedy Mean Girls, and witnessed her co-star Lindsay Lohan’s struggles in the industry up close.

Opening up about her friendship with Lindsay in a new British GQ interview, Amanda recalled how, although they were the same age when they appeared together in the Tina Fey-penned movie, the level of attention they received was nowhere near equal.

“[I] wasn’t working at that level,” she said. “The spotlight was on her, no matter what she did.”

Amanda said she saw in real time how Lindsay went from being Hollywood’s hottest star to having the tabloids praying for her downfall.

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Lindsay Lohan and Amanda Seyfried with co-stars Rachel McAdams and co-star Lacey Chabert in 2004's Mean Girls
Lindsay Lohan and Amanda Seyfried with co-stars Rachel McAdams and co-star Lacey Chabert in 2004’s Mean Girls

Michael Gibson/Paramount/Kobal/Shutterstock

“The outsized bashing is ugly,” said Amanda. “It’s like, a fear of mine. I would not want to be spotlit for being infamous in any way.”

During the same GQ article, Lindsay spoke fondly of the Oscar nominee, opening up about their continued friendship.

“We’ve stayed close because there’s genuine trust and respect between us,” the Freaky Friday actor claimed. “What started as shared experience has grown into a meaningful friendship over time.

“Now we talk more about life, motherhood and our families. She’s always someone I can rely on. That consistency is rare and something I really cherish.”

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Lindsay Lohan

Although Amanda may have been mostly unscathed from the press during the era of paparazzi upskirting starlets and tabloids plotting the downfall of young women, it wasn’t because she didn’t go out clubbing.

“Did I find myself at Val Kilmer’s house one night at 1am with [Mean Girls co-stars] Daniel Franzese and Jonathan Bennett? Did I find myself there with them in the pool? I was 18 and I had just moved to LA and we had gone to a screening of Reefer Madness. I was at Val Kilmer’s house – I don’t even remember meeting him, but I was at his house,” she recalled about her “ridiculous” 20s.

On the red carpet of the 2024 Mean Girls musical adaptation, Lindsay also sang the praises of her 2004 co-stars Amanda and Lacey Chabert, who played Gretchen Wieners.

“I love Amanda and she’s done so well with her career,” Lindsay said. “She’s such a great actress and Lacey as well. We’re good friends and that’s what matters most.”

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Rihanna Kelver facing felony charges shows ‘stand your ground’ is not for trans people

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rihanna kelver

rihanna kelver

Rihanna Kelver, a transgender woman in Wyoming, is facing felony charges for pulling a weapon to defend herself after being subject to homophobic and transphobic slurs. Slate magazine reported that Kelver was about to end a work shift when several men on the street began yelling slurs at her. Then:

Moments later, according to court testimony and surveillance footage, the man shoved Kelver to the ground hard enough to injure her tailbone.

Kelver responded by drawing a pistol from her bag, chambering a round, and pointing the weapon at the man who had pushed her. She kept the safety on and never fired. The man and his companions retreated.

However, the man who shoved Kelver and began the confrontation has not been charged. But, Kelver is now facing charges of aggravated assault and possession of a deadly weapon with unlawful intent. If found guilty, she could face up to 15 years in prison.

For a nation as heavily invested in stand-your-ground as the US, Rihanna’s fight in court has become one that shows the systemic homophobia and transphobia in the justice system.

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Kelver and ‘stand your ground’

Kelve’s arrest seemingly contradicts the Wyoming “Stand your ground” law, permitting an individual the right to defend themselves. In spite of the evidence presented, the man who assaulted her, (referred to as Durham) hasn’t faced a single charge. Kelver has had to leave her job due to her charges and faces an arraignment on the 24th of June 2026.

Many LGBTQ+ news and advocacy platforms have reported on her case, highlighting the unfairness and hypocrisy of the situation. They point out the irony that in a nation so proud of it’s citizen’s ability to arm themselves, the moment a trans person uses it against bigotry, it is criminalized. As Slate concluded:

Kelver’s experience also fits a long and troubling history of transgender people being punished for their acts of survival.

Kelver’s case can be used as a clear example of the double standards applied to queer and specifically trans people in the justice system. And for the queer community it’s seen as evidence of how queer people are not protected by the law to the same standards as others.

The system is not broken

Kelver’s arrest is not a new phenomenon but instead just the latest in a repeated history of LGBTQ+ individuals being punished for defending themselves. In 2014 CeCe McDonald was arrested and almost faced 40 years in prison after defending herself against a group of white people screaming racist and transphobic remarks and then physically assaulting her. In 2011 Ky Peterson was arrested and convicted for murdering his rapist and was only released after 9 years of imprisonment. These two examples are also notable because they involved Black trans people. The US justice system is not only queerphobic and transphobic, but deeply racist and anti-Black.  There is a fundamental ideology within the justice system itself to not only punish marginalized individuals for protecting themselves, but actively working to criminalize those same communities.

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Activist Peter Gelderloos wrote on Truthout:

When transgender or queer people defend themselves from such violence, the law usually steps in to pick up where the vigilantes left off… White people who attack people of color who are crossing borders or transgressing “socially accepted” ways of behavior are defending their “selves” as those selves exist within society (and there is no other kind of self). Heterosexual people and cis-gendered people are defending those white heteronormative persons’ sense of self.

Despite LGBTQ+ people and people of colour being far more vulnerable to violent acts of hate, we are routinely punished for defending ourselves. And that is by design.

This is due to these systems of ‘justice’ being built out of the very systems that perpetuate our communities marginalization. Institutionalized ‘justice’ becomes a means of preserving a white supremacist and queerphobic hierarchy. When most self-defense laws were formed amongst Western countries, they wasn’t made with the majority of the population in mind. Like many laws, they were made to benefit a small privileged group, whilst purposely criminalising minorities for defending themselves from attack.

This is the system working as intended.

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The death of rainbow capitalism

The arrest of Rihanna Kelver and the perpetuation of queer and marginalized injustice adds to a growing sentiment within the queer community. As we reach the middle of Pride month, many in the community have pointed out a noticeable decrease in the typical corporate advertising and promoting. Whereas before, companies would share posts, change logos and create merchandise, it has been replaced by rather abrupt silence.

Corporations tendencies during pride were referred to as “rainbow capitalism”, and was commonly met with annoyance by the queer community. It was generally understood that these gestures weren’t actual indicators of support but a means to seem progressive in order to drive more profits. However whilst the dramatic absence of rainbow capitalism is celebrated by some, it is seen as a grim indicator by others.

Cases like Kelver’s and lack of corporate support during pride, for some in the community isn’t just an indicator of progressive stagnation but in fact a regression. Capitalism may not indicate morality but it can reflect our culture. And with the many recent events happening across the world, it is clear for queer communities that there is a resurgence in far-right ideology. Rolling back queer rights is rapidly gaining popularity.

Pride is resistance

Of course, none of this is to argue that corporations should engage in pinkwashing during pride month. Instead, the death of rainbow capitalism is a sign that neoliberal capitalism has found that it is no longer necessary to pay lip service to queer rights. That, in turn, can be explained by the vicious bigotry from both the UK and US administrations who have normalised the creeping rise of transphobia.

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Despite Pride this year possibly highlighting the ways culture has started to regress, it also represents our perseverance as a community. The reason Pride month exists today is due to the fighting and resistance of our queer forebears. Just as Rihanna Kelver herself is still fighting the legal battle for her right to protect herself, we as community must keep fighting and uplifting each other against this bigoted system.

Featured image via Getty/Heather Diehl

By Olaitan Mos-Shogbamimu

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Jenrick’s Plan To Scrap NI Hike For British Workers Slammed

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Jenrick's Plan To Scrap NI Hike For British Workers Slammed

Robert Jenrick has been accused of “playing divisive identity politics” after announcing a Reform UK government would make it more expensive for bosses to employ foreign workers.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves increased employers’ National Insurance Contributions from 13.8% to 15% in her first Budget back in 2024.

Critics have labelled the policy a “jobs tax” which makes it more expensive for employers to hire staff.

Jenrick, Reform’s Treasury spokesperson, announced on Monday that his party would reverse the NICs rise, but only for “British workers”.

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He said the policy would be paid for by introducing a “Migrant Labour Levy”, which businesses would have to pay for every foreign worker they employ.

Jenrick said: “For more than 20 years now, we’ve had British workers coming second – undercut by cheap migrant labour, which drives down wages and our people’s quality of life.

“The experiment of letting in millions of low-wage migrants – as millions of Brits languish on benefits – has failed catastrophically. Reform will end it.”

He added: “If the migrant is hired, the taxman collects £7,000 in taxes, but ends up paying the British candidate not hired around £8,000 on universal credit.

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“If the British worker was hired instead, the £7k in tax would still be paid. But the £8k in benefits would be saved.”

He claimed there are around 3.6 million non-EU workers in Britain – and the the levy would raise £10 billion from the non-EU migrants on PAYE alone.

Liberal Democrats’ Treasury spokesperson Daisy Cooper told HuffPost UK: “Instead of playing divisive identity politics and creating a bureaucratic anti-business nightmare, we should be focused on helping all our struggling local businesses to thrive.

“The Liberal Democrats have been clear from the start, the hike in employer National Insurance is a self-defeating jobs tax that hits high street shops, local pharmacies, GPs, and care homes hard. It needs to be scrapped for everyone.”

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A Labour Party spokesperson said: “Nigel Farage’s latest half-baked plan would leave British businesses and British people worse off.

“Their proposals threaten to hike bills and leave working families paying the price.

“Reform is not on the side of working people and are simply making it up as they go along.

“Only Labour is making the fair choices to change our country, ease the cost of living, and improve our public services.

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“We’ve already slashed migration by 69% since last year, our Immigration Skills Charge is funding more training for British workers, and we’re reforming the system to get people back into the work and out of the doom loop of joblessness which spiralled out of control under the Tories.”

“Another day, another uncosted policy to distract from Robert Kenyon’s sexist comments,” Labour MP Luke Charters also told HuffPost UK.

Listen to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.

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Client journalists defend Musk becoming a trillionaire

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Piers Morgan and Andrew Neil looking at images of Elon Musk becoming a trillionaire

Piers Morgan and Andrew Neil looking at images of Elon Musk becoming a trillionaire

Elon Musk — the seig-heiling owner of X — has become the world’s first trillionaire. As we’ll explain, he’s achieved this by leveraging his power, influence and shamelessness to prove that capitalism is every bit as rotten as we said it is.

However, if you ask one of the many thoughtless establishment journalists out there how he became so wealthy, they’ll tell you ‘Elon gets lots of money because he makes rockets good‘.

In turn, we’d like to congratulate Piers Morgan for fitting Musk’s entire boot in his mouth.

He got here by being the most hard-working suck-up in the entire Western media.

Salut, Piers! 👏👏

Musk games the market

First, we should explain how Elon Musk became a trillionaire.

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Musk’s wealth just exploded because he’s taken SpaceX from a private company to a public one. By SpaceX, we mean the three companies that make up SpaceX, which are:

Of the three companies:

  • SpaceX is not profitable.
  • StarLink is profitable.
  • Grok AI is really not profitable.

SpaceX could be profitable in the future, as long as we keep finding new reasons to send thousands of rockets into space. StarLink could remain profitable, but the market for satellite internet is limited to customers who:

  • Can’t access broadband
  • Can pay for fancy satellite internet

Grok AI will probably never be profitable. OpenAI and Anthropic are both doing better than Grok, and it looks like they have no realistic path towards profitability either. The problem is AI costs so much to run that when you charge companies an honest price (instead of subsidising the cost with billionaire investor money) they abandon the product.

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Musk and his company losses

Right, so SpaceX is not what you’d call a profitable company. In fact, it made a $4.9 billion loss last year. But despite this, when it went public, it achieved a valuation of $2 trillion.

This is the largest Initial Public Offering (IPO) of all time. On paper, it means SpaceX is more valuable than most companies which actually make money. If you’re confused that isn’t because you’re not getting it; it’s because it doesn’t make sense. It also gets worse.

To be fair to Musk, he does have a plan to make his company profitable, and that plan is data centres in space. The problem is that these data centres would almost certainly be more expensive than the terrestrial ones. They may also be physically impossible to build at scale.

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Who could have guessed it would be less cost-effective to build something in space? Good lord.

And this isn’t the first time Musk has promised the impossible. There’s a site that tracks his broken promises called elonmusk.today. Examples include:

  • 1,645 days since Elon Musk said he would take carbon out of the air and use it for rocket fuel
  • 1,939 days since Elon Musk promised Starlink customers their speed would double by the end of 2021
  • 2,166 days since Elon Musk said that people who get brain surgery from him could pay for it with augmented brain powers
  • 2,327 days since Elon Musk advised consumers that Teslas can safely function as a boat for short periods of time
  • 2,611 days since Elon Musk said there will be a million fully autonomous Tesla robotaxis in a year
  • 2,714 days since Elon Musk said the new Roadster will use rocket technology that will allow it to fly
  • 2,824 days since Elon Musk said SpaceX would probably build a base on Mars by 2028

Why does Musk make such wild claims? Almost certainly because doing so draws attention away from the fact that his companies have been mostly unprofitable, and because the pie-in-the-sky promises cause the value of his companies to rise.

How does this keep happening?

As you can see, it’s both quantifiable and widely understood that Musk’s companies are valued way above their actual — you know — value.

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So why do investors keep falling for it?

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There are two things to bear in mind: the first is why wouldn’t they keep falling for it? In the short term, their stocks become more valuable. In the long term, well, nobody is thinking about the long term.

The other thing to be aware of is that a lot of this stuff is now algorithmic.

For example, the Chosun Daily reported:

Algorithmic trading programs that use automated pre-set trading instructions to execute orders have recently been blamed for the sharp fluctuations in global stock markets. While algorithmic trading programs offer the advantage of buying and selling assets without human intervention, they also have the drawback of triggering massive sell-offs whenever the set conditions are met, increasing market volatility.

This works in the opposite direction too. What this means is that when Musk promises the world’s first self-driving flying car, the algorithms auto-buy Tesla stock. As Chosun Daily added:

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Investment bank Goldman Sachs estimated that algorithmic trading accounted for about 60% to 70% of all trades in the U.S. in 2016. Experts believe this figure has now risen to 70% to 80%.

We may not live in the Matrix, but we definitely live in matrix.

Client media

Now that we’ve explained what the establishment media is mostly ignoring, we can gawp at some of the wretched client journalists who are defending Musk’s ‘success’.

Andrew Neil led the charge on this front, asking “What difference does it make?” if one man’s wealth is higher than the GDP of most countries.

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Imagine the worst person you know, and then imagine that they had more money to play around with than Israel spends in a year. Obviously, this would not end well.

And we’ve  seen what Musk uses his wealth to achieve.

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The influence campaign didn’t stop there either, as the Canary reported, and many pointed out:

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Musk also uses X to boost his ideological bedfellows (which include Nazis).

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Human haemorrhoid, Neil, also did the meme:

Columnist and ex-prime minister, Boris Johnson, got in on the action too.

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This is fine, if you’re idea of success is a series of obscenely overvalued companies that rely on government handouts while failing to deliver on most of their promises.

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It’s not for nothing that Chinese electric vehicles are now more advanced and cheaper than Teslas. Those companies also benefit from state money, but said money is directed into research and development — not into inflating the ego of the world’s most insecure nerd.

Julia Hartley-Brewer had this to say:

The problem? Musk has never designed or built any of his products. He just profited from those who did.

We also don’t have to go back that far to see an example of space travel being pursued for the sake of exploration over ego.

Okay, so the space race did happen to boost America’s ego, but you get the point.

Perhaps the worst defence was this:

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The great IPO swindle

There’s another way Musk has used his great wealth to disadvantage the broader public that we’ve not covered yet.

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SpaceX isn’t just being listed on various stock exchanges; it’s being fast-tracked. What this means is that various stock-buying schemes like 401(k) retirement plans will automatically buy SpaceX stock.

Usually, a company has to be publicly available for a year to demonstrate its value is legitimate. SpaceX, however, will wait a mere five days in some instances.

In other words, Musk has used his influence to ensure as many ordinary people as possible buy shares in his unprofitable business. If the business remains unprofitable, these same ordinary people who will lose out.

Top to bottom misery

The other thing to note about Musk having so much money is that it doesn’t even make him happy.

Hasan Piker noted:

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Elon Musk is a fucking failure and yet in spite of his failures, because he happened to be at the right place at the right time, he has failed upwards with his endless wealth. He’s a horrible person, an unbelievably insecure person, and yet he’s the richest person on the planet. We know he doesn’t fucking work hard because he Tweets all the goddamn time.

We live in a society that is based on wealth accumulation, and yet the man who’s accumulated more than anyone is the most miserable person on the planet.

Maybe it’s time to rethink this capitalism malarkey?

Featured image via Spencer Platt/ Hoda Davaine / Hollie Adams/ Getty Images

By Willem Moore

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How synagogues became fair game for the Israelophobic mob

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How synagogues became fair game for the Israelophobic mob

It is remarkable how swiftly the unthinkable returns. How easily the guardrails of morality crumble to dust. That was my thought upon watching a seething mob besiege Edgware United Synagogue yesterday. They screamed abuse at Jews. They hollered for the destruction of the Jewish nation. Some were adorned in the inverted red triangle that signals support for the Jew killers of Hamas. And there you have it: Jews, once more, are being terrorised at their places of worship. What comes next?

The pretext for the vile swarming of a synagogue in a heavily Jewish part of north-west London was that it was holding a Great Israeli Real Estate Event. It was an event for ‘those thinking of moving to Israel’, as the Guardian described it. These ‘thieves’ are selling off land that isn’t theirs to sell, wailed the wild-eyed Israelophobes. In their warped worldview, no Jew should be permitted to buy property in ‘Israhell’. ‘From the river to the sea!’, they chanted, giving voice to that fever dream of all bourgeois bigots: that the world would be a better place if the Jewish nation were annihilated.

Yet however much the hordes at the synagogue doors try to dress up their agitation in the finery of radical politics, there’s no escaping the truth: it is 2026 and Jews’ holy places are once more surrounded by snarling crowds. The mob accused the event organisers of hawking properties in the ‘occupied territories’ of the West Bank. But the organisers firmly deny this. In the words of the Board of Deputies of British Jews, to fume outside a synagogue on ‘false pretences’ looks like a desperate scrabble for any old ‘excuse’ to ‘harass and intimidate’ Jews.

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It’s hard to disagree. I find it remarkable that not one member of this bristling pack of Israel-haters stopped to think: ‘Should we be doing this?’ They are so intoxicated by blind animus for the Jewish nation that even optics are no longer a factor in their thinking. It doesn’t even cross their Gaza-fried minds that they might come off like those gangs of Hitler Youth who gathered outside synagogues in 1930s Germany with placards saying ‘Die Juden sind unser Unglück’ – ‘The Jews are our misfortune’. Do the keffiyeh invaders of Edgware think their antics are better because they were only saying Zionists are our misfortune? You would think at some point in the ugly mayhem, one might have said to another, in the vein of that meme, ‘Are we the baddies?’.

Even as they were finally compelled to leave the area of the synagogue, they chanted: ‘Zionists, Zionists, watch your back / We will be coming back.’ I invite you to imagine the media storm that would rage if any other minority group were told to ‘watch their backs’. Imagine if an army of racists besieged a mosque and chanted: ‘Muslims, Muslims, watch your back…’ There would be outrage over such menacing, slippery threats, rightly so. Yet the Jews of Edgware can be taunted with seeming impunity. No condemnation from the PM. No expressions of concern from London’s chattering class.

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In fact, the political class helped to whip up the anti-Zionist mob. The day before the Edgware event, London mayor Sadiq Khan tweeted: ‘I condemn any attempt to sell property in the settlements in the West Bank, be that in London or anywhere else in the world.’ Again, the organisers firmly deny that West Bank property was on sale. The mayor’s comment came off like incitement of the mob. He was making it clear that he, too, was morally repulsed by what was due to unfold in Edgware, effectively giving a green light to every wanker who wanted to rage about it. Let’s see if he now tweets: ‘I condemn anyone who tells London’s Jews to “watch their backs”.’ I won’t hold my breath.

There’s one thing the synagogue mob didn’t reckon with – the determination of Edgware’s Jews to defend their place of worship. Huge numbers of Jews and their friends gathered to tell the keffiyeh bigots that ‘They shall not pass’. It was like a mini-Cable Street, only this time ‘the left’ was firmly on the other side – not the side of Jews who only want to live free of harassment, but the side of that twisted Islamo-left nexus that has made a bloodsport of taunting ‘Zionists’. The Jews danced and sang and waved the Israeli flag and the Union flag: a display of genuine anti-fascism against the fake anti-fascists of the Jew-state haters.

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The magnitude of these events cannot be overstated. The unthinkable is not just thinkable now – it is doable. In vile mimicry of those 1930s mobs that swarmed synagogues and boycotted Jewish goods, now ‘the righteous’ scream about Zionism at the doors of synagogues and boycott Jewish State goods. In Manhattan, keffiyeh gangs raged outside the Park East Synagogue, also on the pretext that it was hosting an Israeli real estate event. A Jewish girl had her hair violently yanked by a masked bigot. Placards featuring Jeffrey Epstein said: ‘Free America from Isra-hell.’ The synagogue mobs of the 1930s likewise looked upon the Jews as a paedophilic race from which Germany should be ‘freed’. There have also been synagogue protests in New Jersey, LA, Canada and France.

At the New Jersey protest, Jews were called ‘Zionist pigs’ and ‘baby killers’. At the Paris protest, hundreds of Jews were trapped inside their synagogue as stones rained down on the building. And now in Edgware, Jews are told by a frothing mob to ‘watch their backs’. Can we be real? These are not protests – they’re practice pogroms. We are witnessing the sinister resuscitation of the medieval belief that Jews are pigs who kill children and thus their ‘Synagogues of Satan’ are fair game for mob fury. Not content with making life harder for Jews in the West, now the keffiyeh army tells them they are forbidden from escaping to Israel. So where can they go? Don’t answer that.

It is a testament to the battering our civilisational values have taken since 7 October that 1930s-style mobbings have returned and no one in power seems to give a damn. Good on the Jews who stood up to the keffiyeh bigots in Edgware – next time I want to see many more non-Jews standing with them.

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Brendan O’Neill is spiked’s chief political writer and host of the spiked podcast, The Brendan O’Neill Show. Subscribe to the podcast here. His latest book – After the Pogrom: 7 October, Israel and the Crisis of Civilisation – is available to order on Amazon UK and Amazon US now. And find Brendan on Instagram: @burntoakboy.

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Dan Jarvis Will Not Be Given Any More Money To Spend On Britain’s Armed Forces

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Dan Jarvis Will Not Be Given Any More Money To Spend On Britain's Armed Forces

Dan Jarvis will not be given any more money to spend on Britain’s armed forces, No.10 sources have confirmed.

Jarvis took over as defence secretary following John Healey’s dramatic resignation last week.

He said he was quitting because Keir Starmer was “unable” and Rachel Reeves was “unwilling” to provide enough cash to properly implement the government’s new Defence Investment Plan.

It is understood that the Treasury is only willing to release £13.5 billion – less than half what Healey had asked for.

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At the weekend, Jarvis insisted he will make sure the UK’s armed forces get “precisely what they need”.

But No.10 sources confirmed on Monday that no extra money will be made available for the new defence secretary.

That is despite culture secretary Lisa Nandy suggesting that cabinet minister were being asked to come up with more cuts from their own budgets to spend on defence.

She told the BBC that Starmer had “been clear with every single one of us in the cabinet that we need to find more money for defence”.

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Nandy said: “I can only tell you as somebody who is actively involved in these discussions that these discussions are happening in real time.

“We have a new defence secretary … and I know he wouldn’t have taken the job unless he felt that we could meet this moment, and we are working together constructively to achieve that.”

Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said the PM should resign if he cannot find more money to spend on defence.

Subscribe to Commons People, the podcast that makes politics easy. Every week, Kevin Schofield and Kate Nicholson unpack the week’s biggest stories to keep you informed. Join us for straightforward analysis of what’s going on at Westminster.

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Trump fell asleep at White House UFC match

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Images of Trump at America 250 UFC fight, including one of him seemingly asleep

Images of Trump at America 250 UFC fight, including one of him seemingly asleep

On 14 June, the US celebrated its 250th anniversary with a UFC match organised by Donald Trump/ While this was a notably high-energy event, it clearly wasn’t high-energy-enough for Sleepy Don:

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Trump corruption celebration

This is how the America 250 event described itself:

On July 4, 2026, our nation will commemorate and celebrate the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. The journey toward this historic milestone is an opportunity to pause and reflect on our nation’s past, honor the contributions of all Americans, and look ahead toward the future we want to create for the next generation and beyond.

As you’ll see, there wasn’t much ‘honourable reflection’ going on.

America 250 was a real ‘who’s who’ of ‘who’s in Trump’s rolodex’:

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Over the past few days, Americans have been posting pictures of the Anniversary preparations in disbelief:

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On the one hand, Donald Trump has definitely pushed what’s considered to be ‘normal’ presidential behaviour:

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On the other, this circus is more in keeping with how the rest of the world views America.

The US is a violent and vulgar nation that gets off on its own displays of power. Speaking of which:

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Goodness gracious, imagine an act of violence being committed in the United States of America!? Well I never, etc.

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At the event itself, Trump and UFC CEO Dana White walked out of the Oval Office as part of their big entrance:

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Trump already looked exhausted at this point. This isn’t that surprising, of course, because Trump is a very old man, and he holds what should be one of the most stressful jobs in the world. The fact that he’s awake for even part of the day is impressive.

None of this is to compliment to him, by the way. Really, we’re arguing that America should stop simply electing the oldest man who’s willing to run.

Crypto Land

The event itself included advertisements for Trump’s crypto coin:

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If you’re considering investing in Trump Coin, we suggest you consult with a financial adviser:

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Of course, if you fought at the event, you didn’t really have a choice:

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If you’re feeling sorry for the fighters, be aware that you shouldn’t feel sorry for all of them:

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Here’s the same guy a day beforehand stumbling around drunk and spitting up on himself:

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You ready to start chanting “USA! USA!” yet?

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Donald Trump wasn’t the only Trump generating controversy, anyway. His son Eric was exposed by a UFC fighter for asking if any of the fights were ‘rigged’:

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Imagine having so much going for you and still relying on skullduggery to get ahead.

This is America

Americans need to understand something: the US isn’t a nation of violence and scammery because Trump is president – it’s the reverse. He is not the poison itself but the poison being drawn to the surface. And although you can vote him out in 2028, you’re only going to end up with someone far, far worse if you don’t address the underlying disparity which allows men like Trump to thrive.

Featured image via Pool (Getty Images)

By Willem Moore

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